Canada's oldest grain elevator falls in fiery heap in southwest Manitoba - Action News
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Manitoba

Canada's oldest grain elevator falls in fiery heap in southwest Manitoba

The grain elevator in Elva, Man., Canada's oldest burned to the ground this week, with 125 years' worth of aged wood ignited in a flash bya single ember.

Elva, Man., elevator engulfed in 14 minutes and gone within an hour after wayward spark got inside, owner says

The 125-year-old Lake of the Woods grain elevator in Elva went down in flames on Tuesday. (Submitted by Troy Angus)

Canada's oldest grain elevator burned to the ground this week 125 years' worth of aged wood ignited in a flash by a single ember.

The Lake of the Woods Milling Company grain elevator in Elva, in southwest Manitoba, wasin the process of being dismantled in order to sell the wood and other salvageable materials before it burned on Tuesday.

"It's unbelievable. There was a spark that went up and it floated all the way up to the roof line, which is 40 feet from ground level," saidTroy Angus, who bought the structure and a neighbouringUnited Grain Growers elevatorlast year at a municipal auction.

"An ember went into a hole it was like almost sucked into a hole the size of a football and virtually on contact there was smoke and then there was fire."

Angus, who ownsThe Den Authentic Barnwood, sources, salvages and sells antique wood.He started the deconstruction process on both elevators in January, posting materials for sale on his website.

The aim was to reclaim as much wood as possible, Angus said, but there was some waste wood.

On Tuesday, he and the crew wereperforming a controlled burn on some of that waste wood in a low-lying slough, which had ashallow layer of water in it.

"We were pretty much done work so we decided that we were going to stand around the fire until it had burned down and put it out, so we could go home with peace of mind that the fire was out," Angus said.

Elva's Lake of the Woods Milling Company grain elevator as seen in September. (Submitted by Gordon Goldsborough)

All day, a light wind was blowing out of the south, "the perfect direction away from the elevators," he said.

Then it all changed.In the last hour, the wind switched to coming from the east, towardthe Lake of the Woods elevator.

"It was fully engulfed within 14 minutes," Angus said.

"We knew we had to get the elevator down in a hurry," in order toprotect hydro lines above it and to ensure it didn't collapse and damage theCPR tracks that run adjacent to it, he said.

The crew happened to have atrack hoe excavator on siteto push the elevator down in a controlled direction, letting it fall into a burning heap.

It was gone in an hour.

"I've never felt such intense heat before," Angus said.

Deconstruction was in 'home stretch'

The crewwas set to begin Phase 4 of the five-phase project deconstruction processearly next week, which would have involved laying the shell, or crib, of the structure onto its side anddisassembling the largetwo-by-six spans of wood.

A connected drive shed and an office building had already been removed and dismantled.

"We were on the home stretch. We had already prepared everything so the ground was flat all the way around it," Angus said.

"It was fortunate because we were able to manoeuvre the track hoe rapidly to undermine the one side and push the elevator over."

After standing for 125 years, the Lake of the Woods Milling Company grain elevator's run came to a blazing end on Tuesday. (Submitted by Troy Angus)

By the time thefire department showed up, everything was under control, he said.

"Any other time of the year, this would have started a wicked grass fire. Considering the ground was wet from the spring and it was kind of rainy, sleety all day, that helped us as well."

There was no loss of equipment, no loss of life, no loss of anything other than the elevator itself "so the outcome was the best possible scenario," Angus said.

Gordon Goldsborough, president of the Manitoba Historical Society, had hoped to be there when the crib of the elevator was tipped on its side, "to witness the final hours of Canada's oldest elevator," he told CBC News in March.

He said Thursday he'ssaddened by the fire but not heartbroken.

"The heartbreak had already passed when I came to terms with the reality that the elevator was going to be taken down, one way or theother," he said.

He is disappointed more material from the elevator now won't be salvaged.

"The hard part for me now is seeing the awful waste of valuable resources, given all the careful work that Troy had done to show how such old buildings can be reused constructively."

Angus said before the fire, the crew"still did get a nice stack of wood out of the elevator, just not as much as we had intended."

Built in September 1897, the Lake of the Woods elevator took the crown as oldest after the 1895 elevator in Fleming, Sask.also an LOTWelevator was razed by firein 2010.

Anelevator built in Austin, Man., in 1901 and latermoved to the nearby Manitoba Agricultural Museum, is now the oldest in the country.

Someclaim Port Perry has the oldest, built in 1874, butGoldsboroughsaid it's more of a warehouse-style design, not the crib-style synonymous withthe iconic sentinels.

The UGG grain elevator in Elva has holes that have let in rain and snow for decades but Troy Angus says there is still exceptional wood to be recovered. (Submitted by Gordon Goldsborough)

Angus said he'llnowfocus on theUnited Grain Growers elevator,built circa 1916, which is at thesame phase the Lake of the Woods elevator was. Angus and his team had been alternating work between the two structures.

"Next week we will be laying that one over as planned," he said.

The UGG elevator has had sections of tin missing from the facade for decades, allowingrain and snow to get inside, but Angus said there is stillexceptional wood to be recovered.

"We're hoping that we can make up for lost ground."

With files from Thibault Jourdan